We are bringing the operation of government out into the open so that everyone can see whether it is delivering good value for money. This involves publishing government documents online and making public sector data freely available.

What are the chief government documents being published online?

We are publishing public accounts online so that people can scrutinise them and help to identify overspending. These documents include:

All new items of central government spending over £25,000 for goods and services in full

All new items of local government spending over £500

All new central government contracts and tender documents over £10,000 – featuring all performance indicators, break clauses and penalty measures

All new local government contracts and tender documents over £500 – again, in full.

What government data is being released?

We are making as much public sector data as possible freely available to people. This open data agenda is being led by the release of a number of key datasets. These include:

We are publishing government datasets online in an open format. Anyone is free to re-use the data to create socially useful applications and websites. We envisage that data will be:

published in reusable and machine-readable form

released under an open licence enabling free reuse, including commercial reuse

available and easy to find through a single easy to use online access point (www.data.gov.uk)

published using open standards and following the recommendations of the World Wide Web Consortium.

What is the “right to data”?

We will create a new “right to data” which gives people the right to request the release of government-held datasets. These datasets would then be published regularly. We have already identified the most requested datasets:

Land Registry

Companies House

Integrated Business Register

Environment Agency data

transport data

weather information.

What is the Public Sector Transparency Board?

A Public Sector Transparency Board has been established in the Cabinet Office to support public sector organisations as they fulfill the Government’s transparency and open data commitments. The Board’s responsibilities include:

setting open data standards across the public sector

driving through the opening up of datasets according to public demand

developing the right to data alongside the Ministry of Justice and advising on its implication.

Who is on the Public Sector Transparency Board?

The Public Sector Transparency Board is chaired by the Minister for the Cabinet Office, Francis Maude. Board members feature a mix of external experts, data users and public sector data specialists. They include some of the UK’s leading experts and advocates on transparency and open data:

Tom Steinberg, one of the UK’s leading experts on data transparency and founder of mysociety